Stationary Hydraulic Power
Introduction
A stationary hydraulic power installation is similar to a "shop air" compressed air system. Typically a central power unit (pump) provides pressurized hydraulic fluid to a plumbing system, which distributes it to multiple points of access around a building. While this type of installation is relatively uncommon in current practice, it has potential advantages in the GVCS ecosystem. This page is an exploration of stationary hydraulic power implementation issues.
Benefits
- The same hydraulic-powered tool with quick-connect hose fittings can be used
- Shop tools benefit from the high power density of hydraulic actuators
Design Principles
Constant Pressure
In contrast to simple mobile hydraulics (like the LifeTrac design), a stationary hydraulic power system must support a number of independent tools which can be running simultaneously (e.g. used by different people) without interfering with each other. This requires a constant-pressure, variable flow system, rather than the constant flow approach which is common in small mobile machinery.
Constant-Pressure pump systems
The most common industrial approach to making a constant-pressure hydraulic power unit is to employ a variable-displacement pump driven by a constant-speed electric motor. Vane pumps, and axial piston pumps (with adjustable swash plates), are popular designs. However, alternative approaches are possible, including
- fixed-displacement gear pump on a variable-speed motor
- cyclic (on/off) pump action charging a pressure reservoir ("hydraulic accumulator")
- this is similar to an air compressor cycling on and off to keep a shop air tank up to pressure
- a continuously-running gear pump may be intermittently connected to the accumulator, through an automatic valve under pressure-sensor control (this is similar to an "unloader" valve commonly used on large shop air compressors). A standard Powercube can be connected in this mode.
- A steam engine with variable valve timing can adapt its output speed and power dynamically to a varying hydraulic system load.
It should be noted that a hydraulic accumulator operates at a constant high pressure (e.g. 2500 psi) and is therefore a heavier and more dangerous tank than a compressed-air tank.
When the system is in "standby" (nobody is using hydraulic power at the moment), the lines remain pressurized. As long as the total system leakage is small, the main pump can be turned off and the accumulator will maintain pressure. When a tool is connected and fluid begins to flow, the pressure will drop slightly and the pump will turn on.
Constant-Pressure Tools
For use on a constant-pressure shop supply, a tool's flow path should be blocked (no flow) when it is not in use. In contrast, on a constant-flow mobile system, a subsystem's flow path is open, through the "power beyond" valve gallery to tank return, when it is not in use. This is a concern for tools which incorporate their own valving; for example, it may be necessary to make a porting change in order to connect a CEB press to the constant-pressure shop supply line. On the other hand, a simple actuator which connects to the LifeTrac hydraulic takeoff (and expects to be controlled by the LifeTrac HTO control valve) will operate equally well from an appropriate "shop" control valve connected for constant-pressure supply.
Hydraulic pressure transformation
In most multi-circuit hydraulic applications, efficiency is poor because the operational cycle requires the load pressure and load flow to vary widely, but the prime mover/pump can only be optimized for a single pressure/flow operating point. Efficiency is improved with load-adaptive pumps (variable displacement, load sensing circuits). However this technique optimizes dynamically to a single circuit's load and does not scale to many circuits driven by a single pump -- the situation in a constant-pressure stationary hydraulic power distribution system.
Efficiency and other benefits accrue with the availability of "hydraulic transformers" which convert input hydraulic power at one pressure/flow level to hydraulic output power at a different pressure/flow level; this is most useful when the transformation ratio is dynamically adjustable. Four approaches are:
- piston intensifier (fixed transformation ratio): pressure applied to a large-area piston pumps fluid from a small-area piston, typically the two pistons being fabricated as one piece.
- pump intensifier (fixed transformation ratio): a fixed-displacement hydraulic motor drives a fixed displacement hydraulic pump where there is either a different displacement per revolution or a mechanical gear ratio between the motor and pump
- "reverse hydrostatic drive": a hydraulic motor drives a variable-displacement hydraulic pump.
- this proprietary hydraulic transformer
- switch-mode hydraulic transformer like this from Cao in China
Note that the last two approaches are relatively new (less than a decade old).